04/02/2025
Floyd K. Lindstrom was born on June 21, 1912 in Holdrege, Nebraska. His parents were Anna and Otto Rudolph Lindstrom.
When Lindstrom was a toddler, his mother brought him and his older sister Pauline to Colorado. It is reported that Lindstrom never saw his father. Moving to Colorado Springs about 1914, Anna worked and lived in a cottage with her children at the Myron Stratton Home. Lindstrom was a Boy Scout and graduated from Cheyenne Mountain High School in 1931.
After graduation, he moved to downtown Colorado Springs and worked as a soda jerk before working as a truck driver for Soomers Market, with his route between Colorado and California. He drove for eleven years, working for Associated Grocers when they took over the transportation business. His fiancé, who died in February 1942 of a heart attack, was Mary Jane Wackenhut.
Lindstrom joined the Army on June 22, 1942. He was at Camp Roberts, California from July 17, 1942 to October 15, 1942. Lindstrom was then sent to the 3rd Infantry Division and was assigned to H company 2 Battalion 7th Infantry Regiment. He served first in North Africa.
While in convoy on July 12, 1943 in Sicily, his unit came under attack by four enemy planes. The convoy stopped and everyone dispersed. He saw one truck starting to roll. Seeing it was moving towards an unaware soldier lying in the road and "disregarding the strafing by the planes, [he] jumped on the truck’s running board and guided it away from the soldier and also prevented it going over a steep embankment." This action saved men and equipment. Lindstrom was awarded the Silver Star on August 19, 1943.
On November 11, 1943, Lindstrom’s platoon was furnishing machinegun support for a rifle company attacking a hill near Mignano, Italy, when the enemy counterattacked, forcing the riflemen and half the machinegun platoon to retire to a defensive position. Lindstrom saw that his small section was alone and outnumbered 5 to 1, yet he immediately deployed the few remaining men into position and opened fire with his single gun. The enemy centered fire on him with machinegun, machine pistols, and grenades. Unable to knock out the enemy nest from his original position, Lindstrom picked up his own heavy machinegun and staggered 15 yards up the barren, rocky hillside to a new position, completely ignoring enemy small arms fire which was striking all around him.
From this new site, only 10 yards from the enemy machinegun, he engaged it in an intense duel. Realizing that he could not hit the hostile gunners because they were behind a large rock, he charged uphill under a steady stream of fire, killed both gunners with his pistol and dragged their gun down to his own men, directing them to employ it against the enemy. Disregarding heavy rifle fire, he returned to the enemy machinegun nest for 2 boxes of ammunition, came back and resumed withering fire from his own gun. His spectacular performance completely broke up the German counterattack. He was nominated for the Medal of Honor.
On January 22, 1944 he landed at a Anzio beachhead with his unit, although he had been offered duty away from the fighting, and on February 3, he was killed in a German counterattack. On April 20, 1944, was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor.
Initially, he was first listed as missing in action and on June 6, 1944 his status was changed to killed in action. First buried at Nettuno, Italy then four years later, in July 1948 he was returned to his family in Colorado Springs, where he is buried next to his mother at the Evergreen Cemetery.
His sister donated his medals and paperwork to the Pioneers Museum in downtown Colorado Springs.
He was awarded the Purple Heart and two Italian Military Crosses.
Visit the museum and see a tribute to Lindstrom’s brave actions. The Hall of Valor pays tribute to American Infantrymen who have received the Medal of Honor, our nation’s highest award for bravery.
http://nationalinfantrymuseum.org/project/hall-of-valor/